Pubdate: Tue, 25 Nov 2003 Source: Medical Post (Canada) Copyright: 2003 The Medical Post Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3180 Website: http://www.medicalpost.com/ Author: Barbara Kermode-Scott Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/multiple+sclerosis ORAL CANNABIS BENEFICIAL TO MS, STUDY SUGGESTS However, Further Studies and More Treatment Options Are Still Needed CALGARY - The first large-scale randomized trial to assess if cannabis really does have potential benefit in treating multiple sclerosis symptoms has produced mixed results. There's some evidence that cannabis could be clinically useful in the treatment of symptoms related to MS, but more work is necessary using outcome measures that more adequately assess the effect of symptoms in chronic disease, concluded principal investigator Dr. John Zajicek, a neurologist at Peninsula Medical School in Plymouth, England. In a study published in the Lancet, 630 patients with stable MS and muscle spasticity were treated at 33 centres for 15 weeks. They received oral cannabis extract (211 patients), D9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC, 206 patients) or placebo (213). The study's primary outcome was a change in overall spasticity scores, using the Ashworth scale. The researchers found no evidence of a difference in spasticity scores between patients given cannabinoids compared with those given placebo. However, the patients given cannabis did report some improvements in spasticity and pain. Improvement in spasticity was reported in 61%, 60% and 46% of participants on cannabis extract, THC and placebo, respectively. These findings are consistent with those of smaller studies which have shown some subjective, but not observer-verified, improvement in disease-related spasticity with the use of cannabinoids, said Dr. Zajicek. One unexpected finding was that there were fewer hospital admissions for relapses in the two active treatment groups compared with placebo. Also, there was an improvement in walking time in all three groups (12% in the patients who received THC compared with 4% in both the cannabis extract and placebo groups). "We now have evidence that what our patients have been telling us about smoked cannabis holds up in a clinical trial," said neurologist Dr. Luanne Metz, associate professor in the department of clinical neurosciences at the University of Calgary. Further studies to evaluate cannabis as a treatment for MS are needed, suggested Dr. Metz, author of a commentary that accompanied the publication of the study . "I realize the primary outcome of the study was not met but that outcome measured one aspect of spasticity only. It doesn't correlate with function. We need to keep that in mind when we look at other things that we now know this drug does for people." Current treatments for the symptom of spasticity are very limited and of limited benefit, suggested Dr. Metz. "They're wonderful for some people but we run up against the wall of dose-limiting side-effects in most people that have significant spasticity," she said in an interview. "We need other treatments. If we have another choice that we can add after we've tried the standard treatments, I think that we need to consider that like we would any other treatment, not back off because it's cannabis." It's important to do further studies to evaluate the risks and benefits of cannabinoids, she added, pointing out there are still legal issues and real risks associated with smoking cannabis. "I cannot promote smoking." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake